AMERICANS AND EUROPEANS DANCING IN THE DARK A MERICANS AND E UROPEANS DANCING IN THE DARK On Our Differences and Affinities, Our Interests, and Our Habits of Life DENNIS L. BARK HOOVER INSTITUTION PRESS STANFORD UNIVERSITY STANFORD, CALIFORNIA FOR France Marie Catherine Pauline & Dwight, Matthew, Samuel Whichever way they cross the Atlantic they are going home PAGE v The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, founded at Stanford University in 1919 by Herbert Hoover, who went on to become the thirty-first president ofthe United States, is an interdisciplinary research centerforadvanced studyondomestic and international affairs. The views expressed in its publications are entirely thoseofthe authors and do notnecessarily reflect the views ofthe staff,officers,or Board ofOverseers ofthe Hoover Institution. www.hoover.org Hoover Institution Press Publication No. 554 Copyright ᭧ 2007 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher. First printing, 2007 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Manufactured in the United States of America The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences— Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1992.⅜ϱ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Bark, Dennis L. Americans and Europeans dancing in the dark : on our differences and affinities, our interests, and our habits of life / Dennis L. Bark. p. cm.— (Hoover Institution Press publication ; no. 554) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8179-4801-6 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-8179-4802-3 (alk. paper) 1. National characteristics, European. 2. National characteristics, American. 3. Europe—Relations—United States. 4. United States—Relations—Europe. I. Title. D1055.B266 2007 303.48Ј24073—dc22 2007003568 Contents Foreword ix Acknowledgments xv About the Author xix Introduction 1 PART ONE Continental Contrasts Preface 9 Chapter I: Differences 11 The Essential Difference 11 From the Top Down 12 Aristocrats, Old and New 14 From the Bottom Up 27 The Essential Difference, Again 32 Chapter II: On History, Heritage, and Habits of Life 45 Geography, Distance, and Space 45 Art and Music, Language, Manners, and Habits of Life 58 Views from the Backyard 79 PART TWO Qualities of Life Preface 91 viii Contents Chapter III: Equality, Opportunity, Stability 93 The European Socio-Economic Model, The American Model 93 Socialism in Europe and America 98 The post-1945 Political and Economic Order 109 Chapter IV: Uncommon Marketplaces 123 The Concept of the Union 123 When Realities Are Trump 136 Great Expectations 149 Competition 153 PART THREE Freedom and Order Preface 165 Chapter V: Legacies, Ancient and Modern 167 The Idea and the Tree 167 History Lessons 181 Chapter VI: The Fly in the Soup 193 Changing Relationships 193 Interpreting September 11, 2001 202 Chapter VII: The Force of Things 211 Aspects of Leadership 211 New Crossroads 219 Obligations Written in the Heart 223 Appendix 1: A Comparative Chart of European Countries 227 Appendix 2: ‘‘An American is . .’’ 231 Appendix 3: ‘‘The International’’ 233 Notes 235 A Selected Bibliography for Further Reading 253 Index 261 PAGE viii Foreword ennis Bark is an unabashed Atlanticist who believes that what Americans and Europeans have in common is far more D important than what divides them, and that as allies they have a responsibility to provide clear and strong leadership in a world badly in need of it. The collapse of communist regimes in 1989–1990 gave Americans and Europeans an unprecedented chance to do so. But during the decade of the 1990s, while this opportunity was open to them, they ignored the logical consequence of the end of the Cold War; namely, the obligation to set new economic, political, and diplomatic goals to replace the com- mon front they had maintained while the Iron Curtain divided Europe. Instead, they remained within the comfortable confines of their respective backyards, from which, in the wake of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, they safely hurled insults at each other, thus demonstrating aspects of leadership that were unworthy of the word. If the twentieth century was marked by an American-European part- nership of unprecedented mutual interests, and by an appreciation of common values, and for some by a friendship made of trust, affection and respect, this book’s title suggests that the once-storied relationship is coming apart. For many the Atlantic Divide has widened. Indeed, a great many things have changed since the first quarter of the twentieth century when Theodore Roosevelt invited his good friend, French ambassador Jean-Jules Jusserand—married to an American from a New England fam- ily—to attend cabinet meetings in Washington. These changes are the subject of the author’s reflections on differences PAGE ix x Foreword between Europeans and Americans. Bark focuses on our varied habits of life about which widespread ignorance exists in both America and in Eu- rope. His observations are neither pro-American nor anti-European, but they are astute, and they warrant careful reading as he sets out what our differences are, where they come from, and how they affect our judgments of each other. He points out as well that Europeans think they know a great deal more about America than they really do, and conversely that Americans are blithely unaware of how little they know about Europe. In a series of essays that describe significant differences between America and Europe, Bark sends his readers a clear and powerful message; namely, that we Europeans should pay greater attention to the values we share with America, as we did following World War II and during the first decades of European unification, until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. Europeans should cast aside our prejudices and jealousies, and espe- cially our absurd sense of superiority that is sometimes conducive to ha- tred. At the same time, Americans need not inflame these tendencies by needlessly dealing with their European counterparts in an overbearing or dismissive manner, such as drawing a gratuitous distinction between ‘‘Old Europe’’ and ‘‘New Europe.’’ A more respectful and nuanced approach, the norm when European elites conduct business among themselves, is very much in order and much more effective. These latter considerations, far from new, as Bark is well aware, also concerned Jean-Jules Jusserand. He knew America well, and, in fact, served as president of the American Historical Association in 1921, and received the first Pulitzer Prize in American History in 1923. Jusserand was unusually prescient in his final letter to his American friends; a letter, virtually unknown today, that Bark cites with effect. Written late in his life and after his retirement from the French diplomatic service, he called his message, ‘‘farewell forever:’’ The sands in the hour-glass are running low; I must take leave, probably forever. May peace, prosperity, happy homes be the meed of your energy, good sense and kind hearts. When we judge each other we are not bound to applaud all that the other does, nor even to avoid expressing our blame PAGE x Foreword xi when there is cause; but blame must not be peppered with sarcasm and irony; the tone should be that of the affectionate reproach to a loved brother. Remember this also, and be well persuaded of its truth: the future is not in the hands of Fate, but in ours. Europeans should also develop greater respect and tolerance for the his- tory, heritage and habits of life of our oldest and most important ally, because as Bark accurately concludes, many Americans and Europeans who still seek a harmonious relationship, strongly endorse Edmund Burke’s conclusion drawn more than two centuries ago: ‘‘Nothing is so strong a tie of amity between nation and nation as correspondence in law, customs, manners and habits of life. They have more than the force of treaties in themselves. They are obligations written in the heart.’’ From my Parisian perspective, much misunderstanding between America and Europe (and especially between America and France) comes from a decline of confidence in who we are and where we are going, but it comes also from our failure to recognize that the idea of Europe has little in common with the American idea of freedom. Our misjudgment of what defines the American character also, and too often, takes the form of unwarranted criticism such as, for example, castigation of globalization, as though this term defines a grand American conspiracy. This approach sometimes verges on anti-Americanism as many European leaders attack the straw man that they derisively call the American economic model. Americans, of course, tend to contribute, albeit inadvertently, to the shrill temper of differences of opinion because, as a people, they are much more direct than we are and prefer to analyze issues in terms that are often black and white. Europeans generally take exception to this analytical approach and are more prone to view the world’s complexities in different shades of gray. Bark points out that the issue is not whether one American or Euro- pean view of the world is better than the other. His concern is that they are different, and that without understanding the reasons why, Americans and Europeans lose their way in the dark, with a predictable result. In the darkness we continue to hold one another in a fond embrace, while step- ping on each other’s toes and trying to lead at the same time.
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